Mystery solved!! :) Thanks, DD, for shedding light on that bump in late December sales.
You've joined the ranks of readers who've singled out Chapter 21, a portion of which follows:
----------
"This is the moment when life changes, when the waiting and talking cease and I am transported, literally and figuratively, to a more exalted state that transcends my earthly distresses. Whatever might be troubling me in life, towing off in my sailplane begins an interlude--sometimes of only minutes but more often hours--when everything else dwindles to irrelevance.
"When I awaken, I know my competitors and I will share a common purpose: to fly around the course as fast as possible. Throughout the day, that will be our foremost thought, displacing other cares and apprehensions.
"Soaring infuses me with a euphoria and enchantment that escape most people. Part of the appeal arises from engaging the country’s best pilots in a complex sport. I enjoy the sense of self-reliance. Much later, Into Thin Air author Jon Krakauer will write that Everest teammate, John Taske, a commander in the Australian Special Air Service, began climbing to provide what he missed on retiring from the military: viz., “[T]he challenge, the camaraderie, the sense of mission.” When I read this, I will smile in understanding.
"I never served in the military, so nowhere else have I experienced the collective sense of resolve, the missions through marginal weather over hazardous terrain in an arena where each pilot is relentlessly pushing and being measured by and against others. In the cockpit, I alone am responsible for everything that happens. Part of the allure is pushing myself to my perceived limits, a sensation few seek, much less experience, in their sensibly ordered lives on the ground. I wonder how many people know, really know their limits. Caught up in what author and pilot Richard Bach referred to (in his book, Stranger to the Ground) as a “droning adventureless existence,” most have never really tested themselves, be it in combat or climbing Mount Everest--or in flying or marathon running."
----------
I once contemplated axing the entire two-page section from which this is excerpted to trim down the manuscript (yes, it was even longer then! LOL). But my editor and a few non-pilot friends who read it convinced me otherwise. It's heartening to hear it resonates with you, too. Thanks, once again!
Chip Bearden
"JB"